An apparatus for reading permanently structured magnetic records having a first coercivity, comprising an oscillator having an inductive read head that is coupled to a circuit arrangement. At least one side of the read head sees an impedance that is larger than the impedance of the read head over the range of frequencies of interest, such that the read head provides an electrical signal in response to magnetic records having a second coercivity that is higher than the first coercivity (typically 2,000 to 5,000 oersteds). The electrical signal is derived from the voltage across the read head, which is preferably detected by a differential integrator that subtracts the voltages on either side of the read head to give a voltage difference, and integrates this difference over time.
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1. Apparatus for reading magnetic records, comprising:
an oscillator having a single inductive read head to read permanently structured magnetic records having a first coercivity; and an impedance seen by at least one side of said inductive read head being larger than an impedance of said inductive read head over a range of frequencies of interest, wherein said single inductive read head provides an electrical signal in response to a magnetic record having a second coercivity greater than 12000 oersteds or 100 ka/m higher than said first coercivity less than approximately 200 oersteds.
2. Apparatus for reading magnetic records as claimed in
said electrical signal is derived from a voltage across said inductive read head.
3. Apparatus for reading magnetic records as claimed in
said voltage across said inductive read head is detected by a differential integrator, said differential integrator being adapted to integrate over time a difference between respective voltages of each side of said inductive read head.
4. Apparatus for reading magnetic records as claimed in
said range of frequencies of interest is below a frequency of oscillation of said oscillator.
5. Apparatus for reading magnetic records as claimed in
said range of frequencies of interest is below 10 kHz.
6. Apparatus for reading magnetic records as claimed in
said impedance seen by said at least one side of said inductive read head is at least three times larger than said impedance of said inductive read head over said range of frequencies of interest.
7. Apparatus for reading magnetic records as claimed in
said magnetic record having said second coercivity is erasable.
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1. Field of the Invention
This invention relates to apparatus for reading permanently structured magnetic records having a first coercivity, comprising an oscillator having an inductive read head which is coupled to a circuit arrangement.
2. Description of Related Art
A known apparatus of this type is described in GB-A-2035659. This apparatus can read data from specially constructed magnetic tape consisting of aligned regions of acicular magnetic particles having a coercivity of the order of 300 oersteds (i.e. 24 kA/m). This magnetic tape is known by the trademark "WATERMARK".
"Watermark" tape, being made from "soft" magnetic material, can have non permanent data recorded on it in addition to this permanent structure. One of the features of the active head circuit described in GB-A-2035659 is that it erases any "soft" data which might have been recorded on the tape. This feature is useful to prevent fraud using non-permanent recorded data. The acicular magnetic particles used in this tape are made from low coercivity (LoCo) material.
In recent years there has been a growth in the use of high coercivity (HiCo) magnetic records, for example as tape on credit or bank cards or other documents of value. Such material typically has a coercivity of above about 1200 oersteds (i.e. 100 kA/m) and is described more fully in the standards document ISO 7811/6. The known read head described in GB-A-2035659 does not have a powerful enough magnetic field to erase data recorded on such high coercivity tape. However, the inventor has found that such high coercivity tape cannot be used fraudulently to counterfeit "Watermark" tape as the known read apparatus does not respond to erasable data on high coercivity magnetic tape. Although this is an advantage for the security of "Watermark" tape systems, it is a disadvantage for a general purpose magnetic reader apparatus because two different read heads or two separate read operations would be required if it was desired to read both types of data using the same apparatus.
According to the present invention there is provided apparatus for reading permanently structured magnetic records having a first coercivity, comprising an oscillator having an inductive read head which is coupled to a circuit arrangement, characterised in that at least one side of the read head sees an impedance which is larger than the impedance of the read head over the range of frequencies of interest such that the read head provides an electrical signal in response to magnetic records having a second coercivity which is higher than the first coercivity. This apparatus enables a single read head to be used to read both "Watermark" data and high coercivity data. The high coercivity data may be permanently structured or erasable.
Preferably, the electrical signal is derived from the voltage across the read head. This voltage is advantageously captured by a differential integrator which subtracts the voltages on either side of the read head to give a voltage difference, and integrates this difference over time.
The range of frequencies of interest is conveniently lower than the frequency of operation of the oscillator. Preferably lower than 10 kHz, very preferably lower than 5 kHz.
The invention relates particularly, though not exclusively, to high security magnetic data reader systems.
Embodiments of the invention will now be described, by way of example only, with reference to the accompanying diagrammatic drawings, in which:
The apparatus also includes a frequency discrimination circuit 4 to obtain one or more signals associated with the frequency of the watermark data signal, and a peak detection circuit 5 to obtain one or more signals associated with the amplitude of the watermark data signal. The frequency and amplitude detection circuits are substantially as described in GB-A-2035659 or WO 94/02943 and so will not be described in detail here.
A supply voltage (typically 8 volts) is supplied to terminal 20 of the comparator, and a voltage of 4 volts to terminal 21. In the example shown in
The signal from the HiCo tape is amplified by amplifier 10, which is part of the detection part of the circuit. This part of the circuit is shown separately in
In operation, the oscillator part of the circuit arrangement shown in
Resistor 6 also provides low frequency negative feedback from output to input of the comparator, which stabilises when the average input voltage is half the supply voltage (i.e. 4 volts in the present example), thus ensuring that the signal from the oscillator has a 1:1 mark to space ratio.
When a signal from a HiCo tape is initially picked up by the head it appears across the capacitor 3 which has a high impedance at low frequencies. Subsequently, the low frequency feedback mentioned above modifies the mark to space ratio in such a way that the HiCo signal appears more strongly at the output of the comparator 2 (point 12 in FIG. 1), in spite of that being a low impedance point. With the short feedback time constant of the oscillator circuit in
In a preferred embodiment, the voltage across the read head is detected as illustrated in FIG. 3. This arrangement of components is known to be a differential integrator which subtracts the voltages from terminals on either side of the read head and integrates the difference over time.
The integrator will saturate after a given time. To remedy this, a large capacitor should be added in series with resistor 7 and a large resistor in parallel with capacitor 9. These two components have been omitted from
Note that resistor 6 and capacitor 8 which form part of the integrator of
The detected signal amplitude and frequency from the read head described above are both proportional to the swipe speed. The integrator of
The integrator and low pass filter described typically improve the ratio of HiCo to Watermark signals by 95 dB.
For successful detection of the data signal from HiCo materials it is necessary that the high impedance on one side of the read head is sufficiently high that the voltage appearing across the terminals of the read head is not degraded in operation so that it cannot be detected by the signal detection means. The impedance in practical systems is likely to be at least two or three times that of the read head, preferably greater than 5 times the impedance of the read head. If the impedance is low the signal will be attenuated and probably distorted.
A second embodiment of the invention (having different component values) is shown in the circuit diagram of FIG. 4. In this embodiment the impedance seen by both sides of the read head is larger than the impedance of the inductive head in the frequancy range of interest. The part of the circuit shown in
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May 31 2005 | Central Research Laboratories Limited | TSSI Systems Limited | ASSIGNMENT OF ASSIGNORS INTEREST SEE DOCUMENT FOR DETAILS | 016871 | /0308 |
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